Posted on 12/07/2025 10:06:15 PM PST by Red Badger
Sealed beneath a pyramid for 50 years, a forgotten American car has just been unearthed—and it’s nothing like what experts expected. Once mocked, this buried relic has stunned a small town and reignited a national obsession.

On Independence Day 2025, a sealed concrete vault beneath a small-town pyramid in Seward, Nebraska opened to reveal an unexpected relic: a 1975 Chevrolet Vega, untouched for 50 years and preserved in striking condition. The unveiling drew thousands, offering a rare collision of automotive history, American nostalgia, and small-town spectacle.
The car emerged from what is now being recognized as the largest time capsule in the world, originally constructed by local businessman Harold Davisson. Enclosed within the vault was not just the Vega, but a Kawasaki motorcycle, 1970s consumer goods, handwritten letters, toys, and other period ephemera meant to capture daily American life in 1975.
The event has since sparked a spike in online searches for the Chevy Vega and the Seward time capsule, reflecting a renewed public curiosity around forgotten vehicles and long-term preservation. For a car once ridiculed for poor quality, its resurrection now raises a very different question: What survives when a product outlives its reputation?
A Notorious Model, Unexpectedly Preserved When the Chevrolet Vega was released, it was meant to signal a bold new era for General Motors. Instead, it became infamous for engine problems, corrosion, and manufacturing shortcuts, particularly with its aluminum block and unlined cylinder bores. The car quickly fell out of favor and onto “worst cars” lists across the automotive press.
But the model buried in Seward is different.
The bright yellow 1975 Vega, sealed in a climate-stable chamber since the country’s Bicentennial era, emerged with zero miles on the odometer, a nearly immaculate interior, and only light rust on the hood. In an interview with KETV Omaha, Trish Davisson Johnson, the daughter of the capsule’s creator, said, “It was unbelievable to me that after 50 years, the colors were that bright and that the whole car was in that good of shape.”

Photo of the bright yellow 1975 Chevy Vega. Credit: GM Authority
Brief footage shared by GM Authority shows the Vega as a two-door notchback with a brown interior and a 4-speed manual transmission. Its base engine in 1975, the 2.3L I4 L13, delivered 78 horsepower—though it’s still unclear which version sits in this particular vehicle. More remarkable is that, once pulled from the vault, the car was started and driven in Seward’s July 4th parade, completing a symbolic journey from cold storage into American roads once again.
Thousands of Artifacts, and Some Missing History
Beyond the car, the capsule contained over 5,000 objects from 1975, intended to reflect the “everyday American experience.” Items ranged from cassette tapes and Pet Rocks to a Teflon frying pan and a 1975 Barbie doll. The vault, buried under a concrete pyramid behind Davisson’s former furniture store, was meant to be a lasting monument to the era.
KLKN-TV Lincoln reported that while most items remained intact, some paper documents showed signs of water damage. Complicating the retrieval, the original inventory list was lost in 1991, and a box of ownership receipts was stolen in the late 1990s. Without this documentation, efforts to return certain items to original contributors or their families have become difficult.

Another Photo of the bright yellow 1975 Chevy Vega. Credit: GM Authority
The motorcycle stored alongside the Vega—a blue Kawasaki enduro—also emerged in surprisingly good condition, further validating the capsule’s engineering design. In fact, this attention to durability may be what sets the Seward time capsule apart from similar efforts.
In 2007, Tulsa, Oklahoma unearthed a 1957 Plymouth Belvedere buried for 50 years, only to discover it had been completely compromised by water. That failed preservation effort has since become a cautionary tale in the time capsule community—one that makes Seward’s outcome all the more exceptional.
A Viral Rediscovery Fuels Google Searches and Nostalgia
Since the unsealing, the Vega has triggered a surge in online interest, with search traffic for “Chevrolet Vega” spiking sharply over the summer, as shown in Google Trends. On platforms like YouTube and Reddit, footage of the car’s reveal has gone viral, with users debating whether the Vega deserves reconsideration in light of its well-preserved condition.
50-year-old treasures unearthed from world’s largest time capsule in Seward
VIDEO AT LINK................
That momentum has made Seward’s time capsule a case study in unintentional branding. A vehicle once dismissed for its flaws is now the centerpiece of an event drawing national media, heritage enthusiasts, and even automotive historians.
Whether the Vega will be displayed in a museum, restored, or kept in occasional driving condition remains unclear. For now, the car is being housed near Davisson’s former storefront while preservation experts weigh next steps.
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I changed 600 timing belts in that same POS car.
The clutches were junk too.
They really should put it back in the ground.
My sister had one that looked exactly like this one. It blew the engine...............
Pinto’s and Maverick’s were just as bad but they sold millions of them.
Frankly, there were not that many 1975 model year American cars worth preserving . There is a reason the Japanese ate our lunch making cars
I had a 74 Pinto, $2500 brand new!......................
I am totally unimpressed. We have cars this old that have been preserved and are driving around on the road without having to be put underneath a pyramid for 50 years. In fact restored cars from the ‘60s or more of a thing.
They also buried a Kawasaki motorcycle. I wonder which model? At that time, the KZ900 was the fastest production bike on the road. It was a two-stroker.................
The Vegas were fairly good looking cars even if they were POS.................
“the KZ900 was...a two-stroker”. No it wasn’t.
Now I would love to get that Kawasaki
One of my HS classmate’s family had a Vega with the Cosworth engine. It probably still rusted out.
You’re correct, I was thinking of another Kawasaki model...............
I had a 2 door wagon. It was horrible. Fortunately for me there were plenty of them in the junkyards to rob parts off of.
CC
They looked good, but they started rusting on the showroom floor.
CC
A friend of mine had one of those in the Marine Corps. Red with an awesome sound system he installed...........
aluminum engine. Burned a lot of oil.
Think The Rifleman doing those commercials appealing to our patriotism.
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